Pubdate: Mon, 18 Jan 2010
Source: Daily Press (Newport News,VA)
Copyright: 2010 The Daily Press
Contact:  http://www.dailypress.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/585
Author: Kimball Payne
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

GENERAL ASSEMBLY: CHANGE IN MARIJUANA LAW FACES LONG  ODDS IN RICHMOND

RICHMOND - Radical legislation doesn't usually come out  of
Gloucester, but Del. Harvey Morgan is pushing to  reform Virginia's
marijuana laws so that possessing  small amounts of pot is no longer
an automatic felony.

Morgan, a long-serving Republican pharmacist from  Gloucester, is
sponsoring a pair of bills to overhaul  how Virginia treats marijuana.
One bill would  decriminalize marijuana possession -- turning an
automatic felony and 30-day jail sentence into a $500  fine. The other
bill would allow broader use of medical  marijuana.

"I don't think either one will go very far to be  honest," Morgan said
Monday. "I've never smoked  marijuana myself, but I'm a pharmacist so
I feel I  should be carrying this kind of legislation."

Morgan said he is expecting a significant amount of  feedback and he
hopes it triggers an adult conversation  about the drug, which has
gained a legal foothold on  the West Coast. Morgan's effort faces long
odds in a  capitol where officials brandish "tough on crime"
credentials.

Virginians busted with more than one ounce of weed  would still face
the criminal justice system, but  anything under an ounce would be
subject to a civil  fine, much like a parking ticket.

"I want to stress that this isn't legalization," he  said. "There will
still be a penalty, it just won't  scar you for life."

Lawmakers in state capitols around the country are  wrestling with
marijuana laws on a scale unmatched in  recent years. Recent efforts
to relax punishments for  marijuana possession have focused largely on
allowing  sick people to use the drug as a treatment for diseases
like cancer, glaucoma and AIDS. Some cash-strapped  states have toyed
with the idea of legalization as an  avenue to raise money through
taxes on marijuana sales.

Supporters of decriminalization efforts argue that  marijuana is less
harmful than alcohol and that  prohibitions simply end up enriching
criminals.  Further, supporters say that legal restrictions on pot
clog the judicial system with low-level users and  gobble up police
time, effort and energy.

Opponents of more mellow marijuana laws say the plant  is a so-called
"gateway drug" that puts users on a path  to try more powerful and
harmful drugs like cocaine and  heroin. Further, opponents say,
decriminalizing pot  would give young people more incentive and
opportunity  to try it.

Morgan, however, said he wants Virginia to start  considering changes
because the state's current  penalties for marijuana are too harsh.
Three times  Morgan has sponsored a bill that would have allowed
someone convicted of marijuana possession to expunge  the charge after
10 years. The bill failed to get out  of committee twice in the House
and died in the Senate  a final time.

"If you're 18 and you get caught with even the smallest  amount, it's
a felony," Morgan said. "And a felony will  stay on your record for
the rest of your life."

Morgan's second proposal would allow people with  different diseases
to use marijuana for treatment.  Current Virginia code allows patients
suffering from  cancer and glaucoma to use cannabis for treatment with
  a valid prescription from a medical doctor. Morgan said  he wants to
allow people who suffer from other ailments  to use marijuana for treatment. 
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